reviewsinterviews - The University of the West Indies

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reviewsinterviews - The University of the West Indies

EXPRESS Monday, August 5, 1996 Pag* 15
reviews interviews
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some of: Msaj)r
The man
for whom
steel sings
"He always knew what he was doing," says Coyle. "But
now he's learnt how to communicate it very clearly and
precisely."
This is hardly surprising, because in addition to the
^•••^••x•,:•/.:::i,-:..:-;^. : • ' -_-•"-' : apprentices who work with him, the undergraduates
whom he teaches during the semester and the 60-odd participants in the annual steelband workshop, Mannette
with his team also services over 200 public school, university, community and private bands. So far for this year,
Mannette has held five workshops in other universities,
and he has written, with Kaethe George and Chandler
Bailey, a detailed manual for pan construction.
By KIM JOHNSON
Taking the art of pan construction and tuning seriously means performing scientific experiments to discover
"WE HAVE developed a language," explained Ellie
the best steel for different pans, its chemical composition
Mannette, looking over his spectacles.
and its ideal thickness. It means designing special tools
~e was bending over the lower pan from his
for making and testing the instrument. In Mannette's
quaduet invention. Surrounding him were
work room there are soundproof cubicles where
the tools of his trade: the range of hamdrums are sunk. Earplugs are given to everyone
mers specially designed and made by the
entering the room, so the noise doesn't damage
West Virginia University's engineering
your hearing.
department; the electronic strobe for sound
The quality of the programme is shown by
• analysis.
the instruments produced by Mannette and his
He motioned to one of his apprentices. "This note's floathandful of apprentices, for these are the most
ing, it's too wide," said Mannette. "We want to get a darker
beautiful pans in the world. Their faces are as
tone from it. I'll pop it up here and make it longer, pop it up
smooth and unblemished as the chrome skirt —
a little bit and shoot for the G."
not a single hammer dent. Acoustically, they all
Then he looked up over his spectacles again. "I have to do
conform to the highest standards of electronic qualit professionally here so the youngsters could learn," he said
Exhausting his conviviality, the master returns to talking about tun- ity control and testing.
to me. "When I first came to New York, the people in the
ing, about the temperament of the notes, in which he tries to put as
The University Tuning Project not only supports itself
schools said I had to use the strobe. I didn't want to. You
through the sale of pans, but its success can also be
know how Trinidadians feel they know it all, I was so too — many as five partials. He always puts at least two octaves in any one
note, but the harmonics are different. "At one time we were guessing, but gauged by the special tuning hammers it was able to have
I felt I could do it good enough by ear, but they proved me
now we know it depends on the tones of the metal," he says. "You have to designed and which are also for sale, as well as the variwrong."
He recalled how they'd asked him to tune his best pan by find out what the metal tone is saying and put a harmonic to go with it." ous packages for the setting up of completely new bands,
He says that having to teach the art of building and tuning pans to
providing even written arrangements of Panorama tunes,
ear, take as long as he liked, and bring it to be tested. When
calypsoes, pop, Christmas, and classical music.
he did so they showed him how the accuracy of several other students, all of whom have graduate degrees in music, he has had to
"In 1970 when I first met Ellie there were no college
instruments — a piano, a xylophone, a trumpet — was con- hone it to the greatest degree of precision. If he shows them on a blackboard to hit the note here and they'll get an octave, then it has to work
steelbands," says musician Jimmy Leyden. "Now there
firmed by the strobe. Then they tested his pan. "All my
when they try it.
are over 500 collegiate and high school steelbands, and
notes were wrong," he says pointedly.
"You don't hit the note any more as we did long time — you hit around that doesn't count the community bands set up by
He focuses back on the instrument before him. "I'm trying to get a darker sound here. I created some rings and now it and that way you change everything," he says. "As the note begins to
Trinidadians."
The only thing that remains for Mannette to do, now
I'm having a problem taking it off," he says as much to him- 'relate', the overtones play with each other and it sings more."
Much of this is Greek to the layman, but Mannette's chief apprenthat he has conquered the US, is to reconquer Trinidad
self as anyone else, as he taps the note with the hammer.
tice Alan Coyle, a music graduate who has worked with Mannette for
and Tobago — which he might very well do next year,
Suddenly he exclaims, "Hendricks!"
three years, says that the master craftsman is by far the best teacher
when he plans to take up an invitation from the Culture
A young blond woman looks up, startled. Immediately
he'severhad.
.
^---.'J-J^-h
i-..*..!
i
,
;
Ministry •and UWI t'o hold a workshop back home.
she smiles and yells back, "Mannette!"
iscoveredhe
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